Refund'' Refund'' DuPONT Rides The BREAKING AWAY DVD!!

Alexandra DuPont is both between “Fear Factor” challenges and busily advising the U.S. Geological Survey on the recent Simi Valley quakes, but she didn’t want the DVD release of “Breaking Away” to transpire without mention.

Thanks as always to The DVD Journal for the regular loan of the dreamy and versatile Ms. DuPont’s fabulous reviews!

Dave Stoller (Dennis Christopher) is just out of high school - and stuck in a fantasy limbo. When he's not lounging around jobless with his three high-school buddies (Dennis Quaid, Daniel Stern, Jackie Earle Haley) and wondering what to do with his life, he's fantasizing about bicycling with Italy's Cinzano racing team. He's so obsessed with Italian bike-racing, in fact, that he rides for hours each day, shaves his legs, adopts a phony "mama mia" accent, plasters his walls with cycling posters, re-names his cat "Fellini," and woos a college co-ed (Robyn Douglass) by pretending to be an Italian exchange student.

As in the original "Rocky," characters drive Tesich's
story, and the concept of "winning" is largely defined
by moral and spiritual victories, not necessarily by
whether our heroes "win" or lose." (Stoller's lowest
point comes, in fact, when he races against his fabled
Italian heroes and discovers - painfully - that
being a scrappy, good-hearted underdog is no match for
a bike pump in the spokes.)

Fox's DVD isn't much to write home about - it's
barely a step up from a solid VHS copy, save that it's
in widescreen - but it features a good anamorphic
transfer (2.35:1) from a not-too-flecky source print,
with a pan-and-scan option on the flip-side. Audio is
in a new Dolby 2.0 Surround mix, as well as the
original mono (a French track is also on board, along
with English and Spanish subtitles). Trailer,
keep-case. While it's not an extras-packed "Special
Edition" or anything, it's well worth a spin.

It was one of the biggest hits of 1979, it was nominated for many Oscars including Best Picture, and the late Steve Tesich won Best Original Screenplay. It&#39;s one of the funniest, warmest films ever made and shouldn&#39;t be dismissed. So shut up. :)

would it be too much to ask that purported dvd reviews posted on AICN actually have some sort of dvd review aspect to them? this is less a dvd review than a summary of the back cover of the movie box, which i could&#39;ve pretty easily read at imdb. i mean, should i expect a half-page blurb about why "the bad news bears" is a funny movie when it comes out on dvd in 2 weeks? seriously...

Dolby Surround basically plays the soundtrack in stereo, but will piggyback a signal to the rear speakers if you have any. It&#39;s one below Dolby Pro Logic, which also includes a center channel piggyback. It&#39;s not as good as 5.1, but decent in it&#39;s own way. They&#39;ve also recently come out with Dolby Pro Logic II which tries to create more of a 3D environment (although still not as good as 5.1). Hit http://www.docdvd.com/dvdfaq.shtml for a better explanation of this or any other DVD questions.

Dolby surround can als be called a "matrix surround" process and gets processed in such a way to produce a center channel, right and left, and mono sorround channel. The center channel is made by sending any signal that is in both right and left channels on the recording, and the rear channel is made by sending any sound that is out of phase with the rest of the recording to the rear. Nothing to do with the recording itself (except how you decide to mix something), but everything to do with the processor.

...ever since ESPN rated it the best sports movie ever. Better than all the movies about the sports that ESPN makes all it&#39;s money off of? YUP! So, perhaps some of the naysayers here should pony up their $1 and go to their local DVD rent house and check it out for themselves, like I&#39;m going to. Just a suggestion.

...and then watch the movie years later to see how the town has changed? It probably only works with towns, as opposed to cities. I was in high school when they shot Breaking Away. At the time Bloomington was around 50,000 people, including students. It&#39;s grown a bit, but not much - still under 70K, I think.

People in Bloomington have special connection with this movie. Not only is it a classic, but it&#39;s a lot of fun to go back and try to find where different scenes were filmed. Some parts are harder than others, since Bloomington has changes A LOT in the past 20 years. The most classic example is visible at IU Memorial Union bowling alley. There&#39;s a scene in the movie where Daniel Stern accidentally throws a bowling ball through a stained-glass window, and that window STILL looks different from the rest. Mooseboy, since you&#39;re also from Bloomington, I&#39;d be interested in talking to you about your thoughts on the town and the movie, and how much of a jack-ass Bob Knight is.

Back in my teenage school years, they forced us to watch this in English class. Slouching, scowling, and zits erupting like Mt Pinatubo, we did so. And it was fucking GREAT. This film hit the mark in every possible way, and I still reckon "Refund? Refund? . . . . REFUND? . . . .. REFUND?" is still one of the funniest lines in movie history. OK, so you had to be there . . .

So, you&#39;re recommending buying a bare-bones DVD of Breaking Away, knowing that a chock-filled DVD of the same film is probably only 12-18 months away? Screw that! I&#39;m still trying to figure out where to ditch my bare-bones Dogma DVD now that the REAL one&#39;s come out. Thanks for the non-advice. Lately, I think I&#39;ve been getting better advice from Amazon. This little news bit smells like a shill piece.

Like MGM before them, Fox is now letting movies slip thru the cracks without burning in the subtitles for foreign language segments. STEALING BEAUTY (it stars Liv Tyler, aka Arwen, in case any of you are familiar with LOTR, ha ha) just came out on FOX DVD, and the scenes in Italian- oh, just about 40% of the movie- are missing the subtitles that have been in every other incarnation of the film! MGM blew this with some Bond titles, Delta Force, and Spinal Tap, and now Fox follows in the proud tradition. Has nothing to do with BREAKING AWAY, but needed to vent about FOX.

I have been waiting years for this to come out and finally it did but why not Special Edition or commentary with the cast now?
Why do films like this get bare bones and Big action flicks get the 5 Star????
As much as I love action movies, movies like this are about People and they dont make many movies like that anymore, ya know.
This is a classic in my book and it won an Academy Award so even though I am finally glad to get it, I am still a little bitter about it not getting the full treatment it deserves.

I know I a guy who is in this flick. His name is Doug Raferty (sp?) He was the race annoucer at "the big race". It&#39;s his voice on the PA system and he can be seen breafly in one shot. He is now a news anchor on WGME Channel 13 here in Portland ME. My wife works with him. Even though I&#39;ve been reading this sight since &#39;97, this is my first Talk Back post. I know it&#39;s lame, but I just wanted to share.

Yes, we have a movie that chronicles my adaopted hometown, Austin&#39;s change: Slacker. So much in that area of West campus is demolished. I guess it has been a long time since I got here but it&#39;s still strange. Not that I am nostalgic. I hate when people lament the "death" of the old Austin which is still very much alive. Anyhow, this was a good flick. I wish more coming of age movies were like this. Bittersweet, thoughtful, reflective, and universal. Instead those damn John Hughes monstrosities pass as relaistic depictions and worse, the gold standard. I feel sorry for these TRL kids who think Dawson&#39;s Creek and Neil Moritz junk is the way the teen years are. Maybe it is (was) for them. But I&#39;m not that far removed from it to know it wasn&#39;t just a short while ago. I guess we got stuck with Saved by the Bell and 90210. Maybe we&#39;ll get one sometime. Or maybe I better go write one. I&#39;d probably need a damn Pie fucking scene. Oh and Christopher, nice turn of phrase. I&#39;m gonna steal it!